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Feminists
Related: About this forumStand With Service Women
Normally I ignore the ads that come up on DU, but one for this organization caught my attention.
More than 400,000 women serve in the armed forces and put their safety and lives at risk to preserve and protect our freedom. Yet these women are denied access to the same health care available to the civilians they protect.
Today, federal insurance coverage is only available for abortion care for servicewomen and their families when a womans life is in danger. Servicewomen and members of military families seeking abortion care after rape or incest must pay out-of-pocket for such care at a military facility. This is contrary to other federal health insurance programs which are prohibited from providing funding for abortion care, but unlike the military, most contain an exception for pregnancy resulting from rape and incest. The Shaheen Amendment would address this inequity.
Current law forbids military hospitals from providing abortion care except in cases of rape, incest, or life endangerment even if the woman pays with her own funds. Because physicians on military bases are prohibited from providing abortion care, servicewomen are often forced to choose between taking leave and traveling far distances to an American provider, seeking services from a local, unfamiliar health care facility (if abortion is legal and they are not in a combat zone), having an unsafe procedure, or attempting to self-induce an abortion.
Today, federal insurance coverage is only available for abortion care for servicewomen and their families when a womans life is in danger. Servicewomen and members of military families seeking abortion care after rape or incest must pay out-of-pocket for such care at a military facility. This is contrary to other federal health insurance programs which are prohibited from providing funding for abortion care, but unlike the military, most contain an exception for pregnancy resulting from rape and incest. The Shaheen Amendment would address this inequity.
Current law forbids military hospitals from providing abortion care except in cases of rape, incest, or life endangerment even if the woman pays with her own funds. Because physicians on military bases are prohibited from providing abortion care, servicewomen are often forced to choose between taking leave and traveling far distances to an American provider, seeking services from a local, unfamiliar health care facility (if abortion is legal and they are not in a combat zone), having an unsafe procedure, or attempting to self-induce an abortion.
https://standwithservicewomen.org
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Stand With Service Women (Original Post)
Gormy Cuss
Oct 2012
OP
And whoever thinks that rape is tough to "prove" in civilian life, maximize it times 10 for military
libdem4life
Oct 2012
#1
libdem4life
(13,877 posts)1. And whoever thinks that rape is tough to "prove" in civilian life, maximize it times 10 for military
or their families.
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)3. As much as the military has provided opportunities for women and lead the way in terms of EEO
it's still stuck in a backward mentality once sex enters the picture.
niyad
(119,875 posts)2. k and r with thanks for bringing this to our attention